uclinux-tools

There has been a lot of different toolchains used over the years.
But here is the one I use for uClinux development on m68k and ColdFire
right now.

m68k-uclinux-20160822

Get the
m68k binaries.
README
and the source is here.
To install the these binaries,
login as root and run "cd / ; tar xvjf m68k-uclinux-tools-20160822.tar.gz".

The remainder of this page is left for historical reference.
The old toolchains and source are still downloadable, if you want them.

m68k-uclinux-20101118

Get the
m68k binaries.
README
and the source is here.
To install the these binaries,
login as root and run "sh ./m68k-uclinux-tools-20101118.sh".

Further down this page is listed the older, stable binary tool chains.
Unfortunately if you plan on working with any of the recent 2.6.x kernels
then you will need to use a newer tool chain with more modern versions of gcc.
The most recent experimental gcc-4 based toolchain for the m68k/coldfire
targets can be downloaded from here:

m68k-uclinux-20080626

Get the
m68k binaries.
README
and the source is here.
To install the these binaries,
login as root and run "sh ./m68k-uclinux-tools-20080626.sh".

If you are looking for the previous tool chain binary, here is m68k-uclinux-20061214

Get the
m68k binaries.
README
and the source is here.
To install the these binaries,
login as root and run "sh ./m68k-uclinux-tools-20061214.sh".

Also archived here is
Bernardo Innocenti's
gcc3 based development tool chains.
They have been tested for m68k and arm so far.
The gcc-4 based tool chains supercede these, thouh are not as well
tested just yet.

The current stable
version of the tools, the 20030314 cut, is primarily based on
gcc-2.95.3, binutils-2.10 and Paul Dale's latest gcc/binutils patches.
It now includes ARM patches from Philip Blundell and Michiel Thuys and
other patches from myself. An experimental version of the m68k tools,
m68k-elf-tools-20031003.sh, is
also available for building 2.6 kernels.

This release uses STLport for C++ support, uClibc-0.9.19 with pthreads
and full XIP/non-XIP applications on m68k and ARM. It still provides
flat format shared libraries for the m68k tool chain, the arm folks will have
to wait a while longer yet. The latest ARMulator and a working
m68k-bdm-elf-gdb are included. The binary package is now a self
extracting script so that it can take care of cleaning up from previous
installations which is critical to a working toolchain.

For more information on the tools releases, what they contain, what has
changed and how to use/build them look at the following README files: